IndigoChild5559
Loving God and my neighbor as myself.
You can think whatever you want. The fact remains the Septuagint was never designed to be a canon. If you look at the first century CE, Torah was unanimously accepted as canon. The prophets were disputed, the Pharisees accepting the prophets (along with Jesus and Paul) and the Sadducees not accepting them. It can be argued that the Psalms were accepted, but even this is iffy. The Writings, such as Esther, Ruth, Ecclesiastes, etc., were not even on the table yet.I believe the Septuagint was the beginning of the establishment of the evolved Canon for Judaism. Choices were made in what was included in the Septuagint that influenced the development of Canon.
When and how the Writings were added to the Tanakh is still debated, but the most popular idea is that the Council of Jamnia in the late first century is what established the Hebrew canon as we have it today.